Looking for Carterton Medical Centre in Wairarapa? Start here for the practical route: call, book online through ManageMyHealth, check opening hours, use the Tuesday late clinic, request a repeat prescription, understand fees, find after-hours care, prepare for an appointment, or confirm whether you should use the clinic, Wairarapa After Hours, Practice Plus, Healthline or 111.
This page is built for verified patient usefulness, clear next-step routing, mobile readability and entity clarity. It is independent, not the official clinic website, and it does not provide diagnosis or treatment advice.
Emergency warning: In New Zealand, call 111 for life-threatening symptoms or emergency help. If it is not clearly an emergency but you are worried or unsure what to do, call Healthline 0800 611 116.
What should you do first for Carterton Medical Centre?
A patient searching for Carterton Medical Centre usually wants the next safe action, not a generic directory listing. Use these route cards before scrolling further.
Call 111. Do not wait for a portal message, email reply, routine appointment or after-hours queue.
Phone (06) 379 8105. Explain timing, severity and whether symptoms are worsening.
Call Healthline 0800 611 116, or follow the Wairarapa after-hours route below if physical care is needed.
Use ManageMyHealth if registered, or phone reception. Plan prescriptions early because timing and fees apply.
Carterton Medical Centre quick answer for Wairarapa patients
Carterton Medical Centre is a general practice at 159–163 High Street South, Carterton, Wairarapa 5713. The official clinic website lists the phone number as (06) 379 8105, email as reception@cartertonmed.co.nz, and Healthlink EDI as cartermc.
The official contact page lists opening hours as 8am–5pm on weekdays, with Tuesdays open until 7pm. Weekends and public holidays are listed as closed. Healthpoint also lists Monday 8am–5pm, Tuesday 8am–7pm, and Wednesday to Friday 8am–5pm.
Appointment times are available through the patient portal, and the official site links patients to ManageMyHealth. If you are not registered on the portal, the clinic says to speak to reception staff. For clinical help, the contact page says clinical conversations cannot be conducted by email for privacy reasons.
Carterton Medical Centre patient tools before you call
These tools do not diagnose symptoms, suggest treatment or decide whether you need medicine. They only help you choose a safer contact route: 111, Healthline, Carterton Medical Centre phone, ManageMyHealth, Practice Plus, Wairarapa After Hours or routine appointment preparation.
Tool 1: next-step finder
Choose your situation and timing. The result will show a contact route, not medical advice.
Your route will appear here
Select both fields. The tool will show general contact-route guidance only.
- Emergencies should go to 111.
- Same-day concerns are usually better handled by phone.
- Routine online tasks may suit ManageMyHealth after registration.
Tool 2: repeat prescription route checker
Use this before requesting a repeat so you do not leave medicine planning too late.
Prescription guidance will appear here
The official fee section lists a standard prescription request “within 5 working days” and an urgent request “48 hours.” Fees apply. Phone if the request is urgent or clinically unclear.
Tool 3: appointment preparation builder
Pick your appointment type. This helps you ask reception the right question.
Your checklist will appear here
This helps reduce mistakes such as booking too short, forgetting medicine details, missing the Tuesday late-hour option or using email for clinical conversations.
Opening hours, phone, email and what the hours mean
Carterton Medical Centre’s official contact page lists the clinic address as 159–163 High Street South, Carterton, Wairarapa 5713. It lists the phone number as (06) 379 8105, email as reception@cartertonmed.co.nz, and EDI as cartermc.
The official contact page says clinical conversations cannot be conducted by email for privacy reasons. That is important. Email can be useful for general administration, but it is not the safe route for symptoms, urgent advice, same-day booking, test-result worry, medicine changes or anything that needs clinical assessment.
How to book the right Carterton Medical Centre appointment
Carterton Medical Centre’s website links patients to ManageMyHealth for appointments and says appointment times are available on the patient portal. It also says patients who are not registered on the portal should speak to reception staff. For many patients, phone is still the safer option when the situation is urgent, unclear, complex or time-sensitive.
A strong booking decision starts with the reason for your visit. A routine check-up, a child’s immunisation, a prescription review, a medical certificate, an ACC injury, a driver licence medical and a same-day illness do not all need the same booking route.
Decide whether the issue is emergency, urgent or routine
Call 111 for emergency symptoms. Phone the clinic for same-day or urgent concerns during opening hours. Use Healthline if the clinic is closed and you are worried but it is not clearly an emergency.
Use phone when the situation needs explanation
Phone if symptoms are new, worsening, unclear, urgent, medicine-related, form-related, injury-related, or you are unsure whether you need a GP, nurse, Practice Plus or Wairarapa After Hours.
Use ManageMyHealth for suitable routine tasks
ManageMyHealth can be useful for appointment access and repeat prescription requests after registration. Do not use routine portal messaging for emergencies.
Ask about appointment type and fee
Ask whether the visit is GP, nurse, ACC, prescription, casual, visitor, medical, minor surgery, immunisation or screening. Costs and appointment length may differ.
Prepare before attending
Bring medication details, allergies, recent letters, ID if requested, Community Services Card if relevant, and any forms. Ask reception before visiting if symptoms may need special arrival instructions.
What to say when you call reception
Reception cannot diagnose you, but clear information helps the team route your request. Short, practical wording is better than a vague “I need a doctor.”
For same-day symptoms
“I feel unwell today. Symptoms started [time/day]. They are getting better/worse. Should I book here, use after-hours, or call Healthline?”
For routine appointment
“I need a routine GP appointment. Is portal booking suitable, or should this be booked by phone?”
For prescriptions
“I need a repeat prescription. It is routine/urgent. Should I use ManageMyHealth or arrange it by phone?”
For nurse services
“I need an immunisation, screening, dressing, injection or nurse consult. What appointment type and fee applies?”
For forms or medicals
“I need a certificate, driver licence medical or form. How long should I book and what paperwork should I bring?”
For Tuesday late clinic
“I saw Tuesdays are open until 7pm. Are late appointments available for my reason, and are there any limits?”
ManageMyHealth, repeat prescriptions and online-service limits
Carterton Medical Centre links patients to ManageMyHealth for appointments and patient portal access. ManageMyHealth is designed for routine digital tasks such as booking appointments and ordering repeat prescriptions when you are registered and your request is suitable.
Prescription timing is a major patient-intent topic. The official fee section lists a standard prescription request within 5 working days and an urgent request within 48 hours, each with a published fee. That means patients should not leave repeat medication until the last tablet, especially before weekends, public holidays or travel.
Good uses for ManageMyHealth
- Routine appointment access after registration.
- Repeat prescription requests when standard timing is acceptable.
- Non-urgent portal tasks when you can safely wait.
- Reducing phone waiting for simple routine actions.
Phone instead when
- You need same-day or urgent advice.
- Your medicine has changed or caused new symptoms.
- You are nearly out of medication.
- You do not understand a test result or symptoms are worsening.
- You are not registered on the portal or cannot access it.
Repeat prescription fee examples
The official fee section lists a standard request within 5 working days at $22 and an urgent request within 48 hours at $40. Confirm current fees and suitability directly before relying on these figures.
Fees and charges patients usually search for first
Fees can change, and final costs depend on whether you are registered, casual, overseas, eligible for a Community Services Card rate, using a nurse service, needing ACC care, requesting a prescription, or requiring a non-standard appointment. Use these as public fee examples from the clinic’s official page, then confirm directly before booking.
Ask reception before booking
- Am I being charged as registered, casual, overseas or visitor?
- Does my Community Services Card apply to this appointment?
- Is this GP, nurse, ACC, prescription, medical, minor surgery or screening pricing?
- Does this need extra time, materials, forms, dressings, injections or paperwork?
- Is payment needed before the prescription is sent or before the appointment is completed?
Avoid avoidable cost problems
- Request repeats early so you do not need urgent handling.
- Ask about fees before booking casual or visitor appointments.
- Use your Community Services Card if eligible.
- Ask whether a nurse appointment is enough or a GP appointment is needed.
- Bring paperwork for forms, medicals, ACC and certificates.
After-hours care for Carterton and Wairarapa patients
Carterton Medical Centre’s official contact page says after-hours care is available from Wairarapa After Hours Service, based at Masterton Medical Centre on Colombo Road, Masterton. The clinic page lists the phone number as (06) 370 0011. Virtual after-hours consultations are also listed through Practice Plus.
There is one important phone-number detail to confirm before attending. Health New Zealand also lists Wairarapa After Hours Service at Masterton Medical, 4 Colombo Road, with phone 06 370 0011. A Healthpoint Wairarapa After Hours page also says to call first and may show a different phone number in some service details. Because after-hours services can change, call the number shown by the clinic or official after-hours provider before travelling.
Call 111 immediately
Use 111 for severe, sudden, life-threatening, unsafe or rapidly worsening symptoms, or if you cannot decide whether it is an emergency.
Call Healthline
Use Healthline 0800 611 116 for free non-emergency health advice when you are worried, unsure, cannot access a GP, or need medicine advice.
Wairarapa After Hours
Health New Zealand lists Wairarapa After Hours Service at Masterton Medical, 4 Colombo Road, for weekends and public holidays. It says patients do not have to be enrolled and should bring a Community Services Card if they have one.
Practice Plus
Healthpoint says Carterton Medical Centre partners with Practice Plus for virtual after-hours GP appointments for enrolled patients, with Practice Plus availability on weekday evenings and weekends/public holidays.
Tuesday after-hours detail
Health New Zealand’s Wairarapa Hospital page lists Carterton Medical Centre under South Wairarapa after-hours and urgent medical centres with Tuesday 5pm–7pm after-hours timing. Confirm directly before relying on this, because rostered after-hours arrangements can change.
New patients, enrolment and portal registration
Carterton Medical Centre’s official website currently displays a “Now accepting new patients” enrolment link. Because enrolment availability can change quickly, treat that as a current public signal but still confirm directly before preparing paperwork or travelling to the clinic.
Enrolment, portal access and appointment booking are related but not identical. Being interested in enrolling does not automatically mean you can book every appointment type online immediately. If you are new, phone or use the official enrolment link, then ask reception about registration, documentation, ManageMyHealth access and expected timing.
Before trying to enrol
- Confirm enrolment is still open.
- Ask what ID or eligibility documents are needed.
- Ask whether you can book before full enrolment is processed.
- Ask how to set up ManageMyHealth.
- Ask what fees apply while enrolment is pending.
For families and whānau
- Ask whether each family member needs a separate enrolment process.
- Prepare children’s immunisation or previous GP details if relevant.
- Confirm consent rules when booking for another adult.
- Tell reception if you need language, accessibility or support-person help.
GP services, nursing services and what to confirm first
Carterton Medical Centre’s official website describes Carterton doctor and nursing services for the community. The public services section lists telehealth and video consults, regular checkups, women’s health, men’s health, children’s health, family planning, pregnancy care, minor surgery, prescriptions, immunisations, referrals and sexual health.
Healthpoint also lists Carterton Medical Centre as a family-centred practice offering a full range of general practice services. Its service list includes immunisation information and notes spoken languages including Samoan, Niuean, Dutch and Hindi. Service availability may still depend on appointment type, staff availability, fees, eligibility and clinical priority.
GP consultations
Use for routine health concerns, follow-ups, referrals, test-result discussion and long-term condition review when appropriate.
Nurse services
Ask about immunisations, screening, dressings, injections, blood pressure, health checks and which services need GP review first.
Telehealth and video consults
Telehealth may help routine or suitable follow-up needs, but symptoms needing physical examination may require in-person assessment.
Minor surgery
Ask whether a GP assessment, extra appointment length, materials fee or specific clinician is required before booking.
Family planning and sexual health
Ask what appointment type is needed and whether nurse or GP booking is best for your situation.
Immunisations
Ask about eligibility, age, vaccine availability, fees and whether a nurse appointment or recall process applies.
Clinic, portal, after-hours, hospital or pharmacy — which one should you use?
This is where many medical-centre pages lose users. A person searching Carterton Medical Centre may actually need the GP clinic, ManageMyHealth, Wairarapa After Hours, Healthline, Practice Plus, Wairarapa Hospital ED, a pharmacy, or emergency services.
Use Carterton Medical Centre
For GP appointments, nurse appointments, enrolment, prescriptions, fees, portal setup, routine follow-ups and clinic records questions.
Use ManageMyHealth
For suitable routine online booking and repeat prescription actions after registration. Do not use it for emergencies.
Use Wairarapa After Hours
For urgent after-hours care that is not a 111 emergency. Call first before attending.
Use Practice Plus
For suitable virtual after-hours GP consultations where a physical examination is not needed and service access is available.
Use Healthline
For free non-emergency advice when you are unsure what to do, especially after hours.
Use 111
For severe symptoms, life-threatening problems, serious injury or any situation where waiting is unsafe.
Patient checklist before you call, book or attend
A clear checklist reduces repeat calls, missed details and wrong-route decisions. Use it before phoning, booking through ManageMyHealth or attending the clinic.
Before calling
- Write your main reason in one short sentence.
- Note when symptoms started and whether they are improving or worsening.
- Have medicine names, allergies and important conditions ready.
- Know whether you need GP, nurse, prescription, forms, minor surgery, immunisation or urgent care.
- Ask whether Tuesday late hours are suitable for your need.
Before visiting
- Confirm the appointment time and whether it is in-person, phone or video.
- Bring ID, Community Services Card and eligibility documents if relevant.
- Bring forms, letters, discharge summaries or test details.
- Bring a medicine list and recent pharmacy changes.
- Allow time for parking, check-in and any forms.
Common mistakes that cause delays or wrong routing
- Using email for clinical help: the official contact page says clinical conversations cannot be conducted by email for privacy reasons.
- Leaving prescriptions too late: the official fee section lists standard prescription requests within 5 working days and urgent requests within 48 hours.
- Assuming Tuesday late hours cover every service: confirm the appointment type and availability before relying on the 7pm Tuesday closing time.
- Using ManageMyHealth for emergencies: emergencies should go to 111, and urgent same-day concerns should be handled by phone.
- Going to Wairarapa After Hours without calling first: Healthpoint says patients should call first before attending Wairarapa After Hours.
- Confusing after-hours services with the regular clinic: Wairarapa After Hours is a separate urgent-care service, even when based at another medical centre building.
- Forgetting fees may change: always confirm fees before booking, especially casual, visitor, nurse, ACC, prescription and non-standard services.
- Using this page as medical advice: this page is an independent guide only.
Carterton Medical Centre address and map
Carterton Medical Centre is listed at 159–163 High Street South, Carterton, Wairarapa 5713. Check the official website, appointment reminder and map before travelling, especially if you are attending near closing time or during holiday periods.
Feedback, complaints and non-urgent admin questions
The official contact page says if you are not happy with any aspect of the service, you can speak with the practice manager before leaving the practice, or email or phone the clinic about your experience. It says the clinic will confirm within 5 working days that feedback has been received and advise the next steps.
The same page also points patients to the Health & Disability Commissioner if they do not feel comfortable talking to the practice. Use feedback channels for service feedback, not urgent symptoms. For urgent medical help, use phone, Healthline or 111 depending on severity.
Carterton Medical Centre frequently asked questions
What is Carterton Medical Centre’s phone number?
The phone number listed by Carterton Medical Centre is (06) 379 8105.
Where is Carterton Medical Centre located?
The official clinic website lists Carterton Medical Centre at 159–163 High Street South, Carterton, Wairarapa 5713.
What are Carterton Medical Centre opening hours?
The official contact page lists weekdays 8am–5pm, Tuesdays 8am–7pm, and weekends and public holidays closed. Healthpoint also lists Monday 8am–5pm, Tuesday 8am–7pm, and Wednesday to Friday 8am–5pm.
Can I use email for clinical help?
The official contact page says that for privacy reasons, clinical conversations cannot be conducted via email. It tells patients to use the secure patient portal if clinical assistance is required.
How do I book an appointment?
The official site links patients to ManageMyHealth for appointments and says patients not registered on the portal should speak to reception staff. Phone the clinic for urgent or unclear appointment needs.
Does Carterton Medical Centre use ManageMyHealth?
Yes. The official website links to ManageMyHealth as the patient portal for appointments and patient access.
How much is a registered adult consultation?
The official fee section lists registered 18+ standard consultations at $55, with a CSC holder example of $20. Confirm directly because fees can change.
How long do repeat prescriptions take?
The official fee section lists a standard prescription request within 5 working days and an urgent request within 48 hours. Fees apply, and suitability should be confirmed directly.
What after-hours care is listed for Carterton patients?
The clinic’s contact page lists Wairarapa After Hours Service based at Masterton Medical Centre on Colombo Road, Masterton, with phone (06) 370 0011, plus Practice Plus for virtual after-hours consultations. Health New Zealand also lists Carterton Medical Centre under South Wairarapa after-hours Tuesday 5pm–7pm. Confirm current arrangements before travelling.
Is Carterton Medical Centre accepting new patients?
The official website currently displays a “Now accepting new patients” enrolment link. Confirm directly because enrolment status can change.
Is this the official Carterton Medical Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient guide. For appointments, clinical advice, fees, urgent instructions and prescription decisions, use the official Carterton Medical Centre website or phone the clinic directly.
Sources, accuracy note and independent-guide disclaimer
This guide summarises public information from Carterton Medical Centre, Healthpoint, Wairarapa After Hours information, Health New Zealand and New Zealand emergency/Healthline sources. Clinic information can change. Always confirm appointment availability, fees, portal access, enrolment, prescription rules, public holiday changes and urgent-care instructions directly with the clinic.
Independent guide: Medical Centre NZ is not Carterton Medical Centre. This page does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is designed to help patients find official contact routes and prepare better questions.
- Official Carterton Medical Centre website
- Official contact, opening hours and after-hours page
- ManageMyHealth patient portal
- Healthpoint listing for Carterton Medical Centre
- Wairarapa After Hours Service on Healthpoint
- Health New Zealand Wairarapa Hospital and after-hours information
- Healthline — Health New Zealand
- 111 emergency service — New Zealand Government
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026. Re-check official pages before major edits, especially fees, after-hours phone numbers, enrolment status, prescription timing and public holiday hours.
Final recommendation
For routine GP care at Carterton Medical Centre, phone (06) 379 8105 or use ManageMyHealth if registered and the task is suitable. For urgent same-day concerns, phone the clinic. For after-hours non-emergency advice, call Healthline or follow Wairarapa After Hours guidance. For emergency symptoms in New Zealand, call 111 immediately.